Suñol v. Hepburn

1 Cal. 254
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1850
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 1 Cal. 254 (Suñol v. Hepburn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Suñol v. Hepburn, 1 Cal. 254 (Cal. 1850).

Opinions

By the Court,

Bennett, J.

On the first argument of this cause my impressions were strong, that the plaintiffs ought not to recover, and, if it had been qn ordinary case, I should have had no hesitation in so deciding at once. I was not entirely satisfied, however, but that, on a re-argument, additional authorities might be adduced, which would leave the case without doubt in the minds both of myself and my associates. I felt, also, in common with the chief justice, that there was a possibility that I might have been led into error. I thought, therefore, that the case was a proper one for re-argument, and that, the attention of counsel should he called to the particular points concerning which some doubts were entertained by the court. I was the more inclined to this course, inasmuch as the cause was not argued before a full bench, and from the conviction that a decision, which must not only settle the rights of the immediate parties to this suit, blit which may determine great and important interests in all parts of the state, should receive the deliberation, ami, if possible, the sanction of all the members of the court. The re-argument was, accordingly, ordered, and [258]*258has taken place ; and the impressions which I entertained after the first hearing, have been ripened into conviction. Nothing, therefore, remains but to announce the opinion which I then had prepared.

The cause was tried in the court of First Instance of San José, before a jury. The jury were unable to agree; and the parties stipulated that a verdict should be entered in favor of the defendants, saving to the plaintiffs the same rights which they would have had, in case the jury had actually rendered a verdict for the defendants. In strictness, this stipulation should be regarded in precisely the same light as a verdict, and should, in this court, be followed by the same legal results. I shall, in the first place, examine the case as I should be disposed to treat it, had it been tided and the stipulation entered into under the system of practice which exists at present, and, then, consider whether there are any circumstances which should be allowed to control what would otherwise be the legal effect of the stipulation.

The claim of the plaintiffs for the destruction of certain huts mentioned in the complaint, may be dismissed from consideration. The stipulation above mentioned, standing in the place of a verdict, and finding as it does, one cent damage in favor of the defendants, puts an end to that matter.

The defendants Charles Stewart and William II. Stewart are, also, easily disposed of. If it is intended to charge them with taking possession of one or more parcels of land distinct from the lot on which Hepburn entered, the claim against them should not have been included in the suit against him. If they are sought to be made joint possessors with Hepburn, the complaint is unsustained by proof. In either event, the judgment of the court of First Instance is correct, and should be affirmed with costs.

The important point, presented by the papers and argued at the bar, affects the defendant Hepburn alone. Before proceeding, however, to examine the claim of the plaintiffs against him, it is to be observed, in the outset, that no question can be made, whether the acts of Hepburn are sufficient to constitute posses[259]*259sion on bis part or not; for, the suit is based solely upon the hypothesis that the affirmative is true. If he was not in possession, then, surely, there could be no cause of action against him, and the judgment in his favor would be correct. The plaintiffs cannot gainsay his possession without destroying their own case.

This is a possessory a'ction. It is based solely upon the ground that the plaintiffs were in possession of the land on which Hepburn entered at the time of bis entry, and not upon the ground that they held the property or dominion therein by a valid title. This is the proper construction to be given to the complaint, and this is the view taken by the counsel of both parties in their arguments and briefs.

As, in American law, a party, to maintain his ejectment, may rely on the strength of his title, or simply on prior actual possession, which, if his title does not appear to be defective, may enable him to sustain his action, so, under the Mexican system, a party may have his possessory action, in which the possession of the plaintiff and the disturbance thereof by tbe defendant may be the sole questions at issue between the parties, or be may have his petitory suit founded on the claim of an indisputable title. Under the latter system, possessory suits are either plenary, being such as are prosecuted and defended in the manner and with the formalities of ordinary judicial proceedings ; or summary, also termed interdicts, which are conducted without the solemnities of ordinary suits, are terminated within a short period, and either admit of no appeal, or only of an appeal without suspension of the execution of the judgment. (4 Feb. Mej. 271, sec. 1, Ed. 1834; Escriche Dic. de Leg. Art. Juicio Posesorio.”) Whether this suit belongs, technically, to one class or the other of civil law proceedings, whether it is to be deemed a possessory action under the Mexican law, or an action of ejectment as understood in tbe United States, and there seems to be a mixture of tbe forms of both species in the proceedings, can be a matter of but little moment. The result is the same. In any event the question, to be determined is one of possession.

[260]*260To enable tbe plaintiffs to maintain the action they must establish two facts : 1st, that they were in actual possession at the time of the intrusion complained, of; and 2d, that they are entitled to be reinstated in the possession from which they claim to have been illegally evicted. It results from this, that, if they were not in possession at the time of the defendant’s entry, they have never been in a position which could enable them to maintain this suit. How, then, stands the case in this view ?

The action on the part of the plaintiffs is joint, and all must recover, or neither can. It must, consequently, appear that, at the time of Hepburn’s entry, Suñol, Sansevaine and Naglee were jointly possessed of the lot in controversy. The deed from Suñol to Sansevaine and Naglee was executed on the fifteenth day of December, 1849, and thus, up to that time, the two latter had neither possession, nor right of possession, nor claim of title. If, previous to that date, either of the plaintiffs was in possession, it veas Suñol alone. The conveyance to Sansevaine and Naglee cannot carry back their possession, either severally, or jointly with Suñol, beyond the period when they derived their title under it, and any entry on the land prior to the fifteenth day of December could not have been an intrusion on tbe possession of Sansevaine and Naglee.

It thus becomes material to determine the precise date of Hepburn’s entry. The complaint charges it to have been on or about the twentieth day of November, 1849. The testimony, though not entirely clear on the point, one witness stating that as late as the fourteenth day of December, Hepburn had no house on the land, nevertheless pretty fully establishes the fact, that the defendant had taken possession as early as the day alleged in the complaint. The apparent discrepancy in the testimony is attempted to be explained on the ground, that Hepburn’s tent was, at first, pitched on the reserved space of twenty varas lying between tbe Alameda

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 Cal. 254, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sunol-v-hepburn-cal-1850.